- Joined
- Mar 13, 2010
- Messages
- 28,310
- Reaction score
- 32,656
https://collider.com/skeleton-crew-season-2-time-jump-explained-jon-watts/
By Adam Blevins Published 6 days ago
Star Wars: Skeleton Crew premiered earlier this week, and fans everywhere are already curious what a potential second season of the Star Wars Disney+ would look like. We here at Collider have you covered, and during a recent interview with Steve Weintraub, show creators Jon Watts and Christopher Ford revealed if there are plans for a second season and what it would look like. One of the kicks of Skeleton Crew is that it’s the first Star Wars show to feature children in prominent roles, which can pose a problem when it comes to stretching content out over multiple years because, as we all know, kids grow up. Watts and Ford already have plans in place to deal with this, and don’t want to end up like another show in the same boat:
In a back-and-forth with Watts, Ford further explained:
One of the biggest issues among the fanbase for Stranger Things is that the show tries to treat young adults like they’re still children instead of further advancing the story to deal with the fact that the actors have aged. It’s already a major green flag to hear that Watts and Ford have contingencies in place to make sure Star Wars: Skeleton Crew doesn’t go down the same path and that if the story picks up in a potential second season several years later, it’s aligned with the children being three or four years older, and not pretending like they’re two weeks older when they’ve aged several years. As for where the plot could go, it’s impossible to speculate on that until the first season of Skeleton Crew has concluded.
“We 100% Have An Idea For a Second Season”: ‘Skeleton Crew’ Creators Discuss Season 2 and the Time Jump [Exclusive]
By Adam Blevins Published 6 days ago
Star Wars: Skeleton Crew premiered earlier this week, and fans everywhere are already curious what a potential second season of the Star Wars Disney+ would look like. We here at Collider have you covered, and during a recent interview with Steve Weintraub, show creators Jon Watts and Christopher Ford revealed if there are plans for a second season and what it would look like. One of the kicks of Skeleton Crew is that it’s the first Star Wars show to feature children in prominent roles, which can pose a problem when it comes to stretching content out over multiple years because, as we all know, kids grow up. Watts and Ford already have plans in place to deal with this, and don’t want to end up like another show in the same boat:
“We 100% have an idea for a second season and know what we would do. [...] We have a built-in ticking clock of the kids and their age, and by the time we would get production going, we know what age they would be. So, we would be writing towards that. You’ll be growing up with the kids . [...] It would be something like [a three to four-year time jump] to make sense. We haven’t seen the kids in a while, so it just depends on how tall the kids are. But we wouldn’t do like a Stranger Things thing where we’re like ‘It’s the next day,’ because it won’t be. ”
In a back-and-forth with Watts, Ford further explained:
“It’s built into it that it would be a bigger time jump forward because it does take so long to get things moving. This isn’t like it would take place the next day because the kids are going to be older. [...] There are so many repercussions. It’s like, you kind of want to catch up later.”
One of the biggest issues among the fanbase for Stranger Things is that the show tries to treat young adults like they’re still children instead of further advancing the story to deal with the fact that the actors have aged. It’s already a major green flag to hear that Watts and Ford have contingencies in place to make sure Star Wars: Skeleton Crew doesn’t go down the same path and that if the story picks up in a potential second season several years later, it’s aligned with the children being three or four years older, and not pretending like they’re two weeks older when they’ve aged several years. As for where the plot could go, it’s impossible to speculate on that until the first season of Skeleton Crew has concluded.